RV Parks In Tombstone, Arizona
31.7129° N, 110.0676° W
Quick Overview
Tombstone is one of those rare places where the RV destination and the bucket-list attraction are the same town. The Town Too Tough to Die sits in the high desert of southeastern Arizona at about 4,500 feet, where the Old West is kept alive with the OK Corral, Boot Hill, gunfight reenactments, and stagecoach rides down a wooden-sidewalk main street. For RVers it doubles as a mild-climate base for a corner of Arizona packed with caverns, birding, historic mining towns, and even wine country.
The private parks make staying easy. Tombstone RV Park & Campground sits right at the town line on Route 80, just a mile from Boot Hill and the historic district, with full-hookup pull-through sites plus cabins and cowboy suites, so you can walk to the action. A bit west in Huachuca City, Tombstone Territories RV Resort spreads 102 spacious full-hookup pull-throughs, some a full 80 feet long, across 30 acres with mountain views, an easy big-rig choice with a quiet resort feel.
The public options nearby are excellent. Kartchner Caverns State Park near Benson, about 25 miles northwest, lets you camp on water-and-electric sites beside one of the worlds great living limestone caves; you can reserve Kartchner Caverns through Arizona State Parks, and you should book the cave tours ahead. Patagonia Lake State Park to the southwest adds desert-lake camping for boating and birding, and the Coronado National Forest offers higher-elevation forest sites for those who want to escape the heat.
Big rigs are well handled at the private resorts. Plan for spring or fall for the best weather, expect snowbird company in winter, and give yourself a couple of days, because between the gunfights, the caverns, Bisbee, and the San Pedro River, there is far more here than a quick stop suggests. Few RV destinations let you sleep within walking distance of a genuine piece of American history.
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All Dump Stations Near Tombstone
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shoot Out Arena RV Park | 0.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Stampede RV Resort | 0.3 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tombstone RV Park & Campground | 1.4 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Tombstone RV Park & Campground | 1.4 mi | 4.7 | RV Park | Varies |
| Tombstone Territories RV Park | 9.2 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sierra Vista RV Park | 14.4 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mountain View RV Park | 16.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Quail Ridge RV Resort, Arizona | 17.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mountain Vista RV Park | 17.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunsites Trailer Park | 20.3 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
Shoot Out Arena RV Park
0.2 miStampede RV Resort
0.3 miTombstone RV Park & Campground
1.4 miTombstone RV Park & Campground
1.4 miTombstone Territories RV Park
9.2 miSierra Vista RV Park
14.4 miMountain View RV Park
16.9 miQuail Ridge RV Resort, Arizona
17.0 miMountain Vista RV Park
17.8 miSunsites Trailer Park
20.3 miTraveling to Tombstone by RV
Tombstone is an easy drive once you are in southeastern Arizona. From I-10, exit at Benson and take AZ-80 south about 25 miles into town; the highway is a comfortable two-lane desert road that handles RVs well. AZ-90 and AZ-82 connect the broader region, linking Sierra Vista, Sonoita, and Patagonia. Tucson, the nearest big city and airport, is roughly 70 miles northwest, making Tombstone a natural add-on to a Tucson-area trip or a stop on a southern Arizona loop.
Kartchner Caverns sits just off AZ-90 near Benson, an easy reposition or day trip, and Bisbee is about 25 miles south on AZ-80 over a scenic pass into the Mule Mountains. The San Pedro Riparian conservation area is just east of town. Fuel and propane are available in Benson, Sierra Vista, and Tombstone itself, and you will want to top off in the larger towns, since services are sparse on the desert highways. Tucson International Airport serves fly-and-rent travelers. Big rigs do fine on the main routes, but the climb into Bisbee and some forest roads are better left to a tow vehicle.
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Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Tombstone, Arizona, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.
Check your RV insurance coverage
A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.
Know your roadside assistance options
RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.
Decide about an extended warranty early
Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.
Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees
A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.
RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.
Dump Station Costs in Tombstone
Southeastern Arizona is an affordable RV region, and Tombstone reflects that. Private full-hookup parks in and around town generally run in the $35 to $50 range nightly for a 50-amp big-rig site, with Tombstone Territories and the in-town park both reasonable, and several honor discount clubs like Good Sam and Passport America that can cut the rate further. Weekly and monthly rates make the area an inexpensive winter snowbird base compared with the busier Phoenix and Tucson markets.
The state parks are the value standouts for the experience. Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake water-and-electric sites run in the low-to-mid $20s plus a daily park entrance fee, and Coronado National Forest sites are cheaper still, though without hookups. Budget separately for the attractions, since Tombstone is a pay-as-you-go town: the OK Corral show, Boot Hill, and the various reenactments and rides each carry a small fee, and the Kartchner cave tours are ticketed. None of it is expensive, but it adds up over a full day. Overall, this corner of Arizona delivers a lot of history and scenery for a modest camping budget.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Tombstone by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
35F - 62F
Crowds: High
Mild, sunny days draw snowbirds to the full-hookup resorts. Nights are cold at 4,500 feet, so bring good heat. A comfortable, quiet time to tour the sights.
Spring
Mar - May
47F - 78F
Crowds: High
Warm, dry, and ideal for the Old West sights and desert hiking, with some windy days and wildflowers in good years. A popular stretch.
Summer
Jun - Aug
64F - 90F
Crowds: Medium
Warm high-desert days, milder than Phoenix, with late-summer monsoon storms and cool evenings at elevation. Keep 50-amp power for afternoon AC.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 79F
Crowds: High
Excellent weather, clear skies, and superb San Pedro River birding. One of the best times to visit this corner of Arizona.
Explore the Tombstone Area
The smart way to do Tombstone is to park a full-hookup site in or right next to town and explore the historic district on foot. It is compact and walkable, and you will not want to maneuver a rig among the tourists and stagecoaches. From that base, the surrounding area rewards a day or two of exploring beyond the gunfight shows, which can feel touristy on their own.
Add Kartchner Caverns State Park near Benson for a genuinely world-class experience: camp on a hookup site and tour the living limestone cave, but reserve the cave tours well ahead, since they are timed and sell out. Bird-watchers should not miss the San Pedro Riparian area just east of town, one of the best birding corridors in North America, and Bisbee to the south is a photogenic former mining town turned artist colony worth a half-day. Time your visit for spring or fall when the high-desert weather is ideal; winters are mild and draw snowbirds, but nights get cold at 4,500 feet, so bring good heat. Summer is warmer but far more comfortable than the Phoenix lowlands, with cool evenings and monsoon storms to watch.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Tombstone
What are the best RV parks in Tombstone, AZ?
Tombstone RV Park & Campground is the most convenient, sitting right at the town line on Route 80 about a mile from Boot Hill and the historic district, with full-hookup pull-through sites plus cabins and cowboy suites. For a quieter resort feel, Tombstone Territories RV Resort in nearby Huachuca City offers 102 spacious full-hookup pull-throughs, some 80 feet long, on 30 acres with mountain views. For public camping, Kartchner Caverns State Park near Benson has water-and-electric sites beside a world-class cave, and Patagonia Lake State Park to the southwest offers desert-lake camping. Together they give you walkable Old West access or scenic state-park stays nearby.
Do Tombstone RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, the private parks do. Both Tombstone RV Park & Campground and Tombstone Territories RV Resort offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50-amp electric on pull-through sites built for big rigs, with Tombstone Territories featuring especially long 80-foot pull-throughs. The nearby Arizona state parks are a step down on hookups: Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake provide water and electric but no sewer at the site, though they have dump stations. Coronado National Forest campgrounds are dry with no hookups. For a worry-free full-hookup stay close to the historic district, base at one of the two private parks and use the state parks for scenic day trips or short stays.
How much does RV camping cost in Tombstone?
Tombstone is an affordable RV stop. Private full-hookup parks generally run $35 to $50 a night for a 50-amp big-rig site, and several honor discount clubs like Good Sam and Passport America that can lower the rate, with weekly and monthly options that make the area a budget-friendly winter snowbird base. The Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake run in the low-to-mid $20s for water-and-electric sites plus a daily entrance fee. Budget separately for attractions, since Tombstone is a pay-per-activity town where the OK Corral show, Boot Hill, reenactments, and Kartchner cave tours each carry a modest fee that adds up over a full day of sightseeing.
Is Tombstone a good winter snowbird spot?
Yes, southeastern Arizona is a solid, lower-key snowbird region, and Tombstone fits right in. Winter days are mild and sunny, typically in the 60s, which draws RVers to the full-hookup resorts on monthly rates, away from the busier and pricier Phoenix and Tucson scenes. The tradeoff is elevation: at about 4,500 feet, winter nights get genuinely cold, often near or below freezing, so you will want reliable furnace heat and basic freeze precautions. The payoff is a quieter, more historic and scenic base with caverns, birding, Bisbee, and wine country all nearby. If you want warm winter days without the crowds, this corner of Arizona is worth considering.
When is the best time to RV in Tombstone?
Spring and fall are the best, with warm, dry, comfortable days perfect for the Old West sights, desert hiking, and birding along the San Pedro River. Fall in particular brings excellent weather and clear skies. Winter is mild and popular with snowbirds, though cold nights at elevation call for good heat. Summer is warmer but, thanks to the 4,500-foot elevation, much more pleasant than the brutal Phoenix lowlands, with cool evenings and dramatic late-summer monsoon storms. There really is no bad season here, but if you want the ideal balance of weather and activities, aim for the spring or fall shoulder months.
Can big rigs camp in Tombstone?
Yes, big rigs are well served. Tombstone Territories RV Resort is built for them, with 102 pull-through sites, some a full 80 feet long, on spacious level ground, and Tombstone RV Park & Campground also offers full-hookup pull-throughs near the historic district. Access is easy on AZ-80 from Benson off I-10, a comfortable two-lane desert highway. The Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake can fit most rigs but have varying site lengths, so check when reserving. The places to leave the big rig behind are the climb into Bisbee and the Coronado National Forest roads, which are better suited to a tow vehicle. Overall, this is an easy area for large coaches.
Is Kartchner Caverns State Park worth visiting?
Absolutely, it is one of the highlights of camping in this region. Kartchner Caverns near Benson protects a spectacular living limestone cave system with massive stalactites, stalagmites, and one of the worlds longest soda straw formations, kept moist and growing. The park offers campsites with water and electric hookups, making it easy to stay right there and tour the cave. The catch is that cave tours are guided, timed, and limited to protect the formations, so they sell out, especially on weekends and in peak season, and you must reserve them in advance rather than counting on same-day tickets. Pair a night or two of camping with a cave tour for a memorable stop about 25 miles from Tombstone.
What is there to do around Tombstone besides the OK Corral?
Quite a lot, which surprises many first-time visitors. Beyond the gunfight reenactments, Boot Hill, and the historic district, Kartchner Caverns offers world-class cave tours, and the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area just east of town is one of the premier birding spots in North America along a rare desert river. Bisbee, about 25 miles south, is a beautifully preserved former copper-mining town turned artist colony with steep streets and good food. The Sonoita and Elgin area to the west is Arizona wine country, and the Coronado National Forest offers cooler high-country hiking. Fort Huachuca near Sierra Vista adds military history. It is easy to fill two or three days.
How far ahead do I need to reserve near Tombstone?
For the private parks, you can usually book a few days to a couple of weeks ahead outside of peak times, though winter snowbird season and spring weekends tighten availability, so reserve earlier then. The bigger planning item is Kartchner Caverns State Park: its campsites and especially its guided cave tours book up well in advance, particularly on weekends and holidays, so reserve those as soon as you know your dates. Patagonia Lake is also popular on warm weekends for its boating and birding. Coronado National Forest has some first-come sites if you want flexibility. In short, the private parks are fairly easy, but plan ahead for the state parks and cave tours.
Are Tombstone RV parks open year-round?
Yes, the mild high-desert climate keeps Tombstone-area RV parks open all twelve months, and the area actively welcomes winter snowbirds. The private full-hookup parks operate year-round, and the Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake are also year-round destinations. There are no snow-driven seasonal closures at this elevation, though winter nights are cold enough to warrant freeze precautions. The practical considerations are simply weather: bring good heat for cold winter nights, run air conditioning on warm summer afternoons, and watch for monsoon storms in late summer. Because every season is workable here, Tombstone is a dependable stop whether you are passing through southern Arizona or settling in for a winter.
Should I stay in Tombstone or at a nearby state park?
It depends on what you want. Stay at a private park in or next to Tombstone if walkable access to the Old West historic district, full hookups, and convenience are your priorities, which suits most first-time visitors here for the OK Corral experience. Choose Kartchner Caverns or Patagonia Lake State Park if you would rather wake up in a scenic natural setting beside a cave or a desert lake, and do not mind water-and-electric rather than full hookups. Many RVers do both on one trip, splitting nights between a Tombstone base for the history and a state park for the scenery. The towns and parks are close enough that repositioning is quick and easy.
Is southeastern Arizona good for birding while RV camping?
Outstanding, in fact. The area around Tombstone is one of the top birding regions in the United States, drawing birders from around the world. The San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area just east of town protects a rare flowing desert river that acts as a migration corridor, hosting hundreds of species, and the nearby sky-island mountain ranges in the Coronado National Forest add even more diversity, including specialty hummingbirds. Spring and fall migrations are especially rich. Camping at a full-hookup park in Tombstone or at Patagonia Lake State Park puts you within easy reach of these hotspots, so if you enjoy birding, build extra time into your Tombstone stay to explore the San Pedro and the surrounding canyons.
What are the best RV parks in Tombstone, AZ?
Tombstone RV Park & Campground is the most convenient, sitting right at the town line on Route 80 about a mile from Boot Hill and the historic district, with full-hookup pull-through sites plus cabins and cowboy suites. For a quieter resort feel, Tombstone Territories RV Resort in nearby Huachuca City offers 102 spacious full-hookup pull-throughs, some 80 feet long, on 30 acres with mountain views. For public camping, Kartchner Caverns State Park near Benson has water-and-electric sites beside a world-class cave, and Patagonia Lake State Park to the southwest offers desert-lake camping. Together they give you walkable Old West access or scenic state-park stays nearby.
Do Tombstone RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, the private parks do. Both Tombstone RV Park & Campground and Tombstone Territories RV Resort offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50-amp electric on pull-through sites built for big rigs, with Tombstone Territories featuring especially long 80-foot pull-throughs. The nearby Arizona state parks are a step down on hookups: Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake provide water and electric but no sewer at the site, though they have dump stations. Coronado National Forest campgrounds are dry with no hookups. For a worry-free full-hookup stay close to the historic district, base at one of the two private parks and use the state parks for scenic day trips or short stays.
How much does RV camping cost in Tombstone?
Tombstone is an affordable RV stop. Private full-hookup parks generally run $35 to $50 a night for a 50-amp big-rig site, and several honor discount clubs like Good Sam and Passport America that can lower the rate, with weekly and monthly options that make the area a budget-friendly winter snowbird base. The Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake run in the low-to-mid $20s for water-and-electric sites plus a daily entrance fee. Budget separately for attractions, since Tombstone is a pay-per-activity town where the OK Corral show, Boot Hill, reenactments, and Kartchner cave tours each carry a modest fee that adds up over a full day of sightseeing.
Is Tombstone a good winter snowbird spot?
Yes, southeastern Arizona is a solid, lower-key snowbird region, and Tombstone fits right in. Winter days are mild and sunny, typically in the 60s, which draws RVers to the full-hookup resorts on monthly rates, away from the busier and pricier Phoenix and Tucson scenes. The tradeoff is elevation: at about 4,500 feet, winter nights get genuinely cold, often near or below freezing, so you will want reliable furnace heat and basic freeze precautions. The payoff is a quieter, more historic and scenic base with caverns, birding, Bisbee, and wine country all nearby. If you want warm winter days without the crowds, this corner of Arizona is worth considering.
When is the best time to RV in Tombstone?
Spring and fall are the best, with warm, dry, comfortable days perfect for the Old West sights, desert hiking, and birding along the San Pedro River. Fall in particular brings excellent weather and clear skies. Winter is mild and popular with snowbirds, though cold nights at elevation call for good heat. Summer is warmer but, thanks to the 4,500-foot elevation, much more pleasant than the brutal Phoenix lowlands, with cool evenings and dramatic late-summer monsoon storms. There really is no bad season here, but if you want the ideal balance of weather and activities, aim for the spring or fall shoulder months.
Can big rigs camp in Tombstone?
Yes, big rigs are well served. Tombstone Territories RV Resort is built for them, with 102 pull-through sites, some a full 80 feet long, on spacious level ground, and Tombstone RV Park & Campground also offers full-hookup pull-throughs near the historic district. Access is easy on AZ-80 from Benson off I-10, a comfortable two-lane desert highway. The Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake can fit most rigs but have varying site lengths, so check when reserving. The places to leave the big rig behind are the climb into Bisbee and the Coronado National Forest roads, which are better suited to a tow vehicle. Overall, this is an easy area for large coaches.
Is Kartchner Caverns State Park worth visiting?
Absolutely, it is one of the highlights of camping in this region. Kartchner Caverns near Benson protects a spectacular living limestone cave system with massive stalactites, stalagmites, and one of the worlds longest soda straw formations, kept moist and growing. The park offers campsites with water and electric hookups, making it easy to stay right there and tour the cave. The catch is that cave tours are guided, timed, and limited to protect the formations, so they sell out, especially on weekends and in peak season, and you must reserve them in advance rather than counting on same-day tickets. Pair a night or two of camping with a cave tour for a memorable stop about 25 miles from Tombstone.
What is there to do around Tombstone besides the OK Corral?
Quite a lot, which surprises many first-time visitors. Beyond the gunfight reenactments, Boot Hill, and the historic district, Kartchner Caverns offers world-class cave tours, and the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area just east of town is one of the premier birding spots in North America along a rare desert river. Bisbee, about 25 miles south, is a beautifully preserved former copper-mining town turned artist colony with steep streets and good food. The Sonoita and Elgin area to the west is Arizona wine country, and the Coronado National Forest offers cooler high-country hiking. Fort Huachuca near Sierra Vista adds military history. It is easy to fill two or three days.
How far ahead do I need to reserve near Tombstone?
For the private parks, you can usually book a few days to a couple of weeks ahead outside of peak times, though winter snowbird season and spring weekends tighten availability, so reserve earlier then. The bigger planning item is Kartchner Caverns State Park: its campsites and especially its guided cave tours book up well in advance, particularly on weekends and holidays, so reserve those as soon as you know your dates. Patagonia Lake is also popular on warm weekends for its boating and birding. Coronado National Forest has some first-come sites if you want flexibility. In short, the private parks are fairly easy, but plan ahead for the state parks and cave tours.
Are Tombstone RV parks open year-round?
Yes, the mild high-desert climate keeps Tombstone-area RV parks open all twelve months, and the area actively welcomes winter snowbirds. The private full-hookup parks operate year-round, and the Arizona state parks at Kartchner Caverns and Patagonia Lake are also year-round destinations. There are no snow-driven seasonal closures at this elevation, though winter nights are cold enough to warrant freeze precautions. The practical considerations are simply weather: bring good heat for cold winter nights, run air conditioning on warm summer afternoons, and watch for monsoon storms in late summer. Because every season is workable here, Tombstone is a dependable stop whether you are passing through southern Arizona or settling in for a winter.
Should I stay in Tombstone or at a nearby state park?
It depends on what you want. Stay at a private park in or next to Tombstone if walkable access to the Old West historic district, full hookups, and convenience are your priorities, which suits most first-time visitors here for the OK Corral experience. Choose Kartchner Caverns or Patagonia Lake State Park if you would rather wake up in a scenic natural setting beside a cave or a desert lake, and do not mind water-and-electric rather than full hookups. Many RVers do both on one trip, splitting nights between a Tombstone base for the history and a state park for the scenery. The towns and parks are close enough that repositioning is quick and easy.
Is southeastern Arizona good for birding while RV camping?
Outstanding, in fact. The area around Tombstone is one of the top birding regions in the United States, drawing birders from around the world. The San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area just east of town protects a rare flowing desert river that acts as a migration corridor, hosting hundreds of species, and the nearby sky-island mountain ranges in the Coronado National Forest add even more diversity, including specialty hummingbirds. Spring and fall migrations are especially rich. Camping at a full-hookup park in Tombstone or at Patagonia Lake State Park puts you within easy reach of these hotspots, so if you enjoy birding, build extra time into your Tombstone stay to explore the San Pedro and the surrounding canyons.
Are there free dump stations in Tombstone?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Tombstone.
All Dump Stations Near Tombstone (44)
RV ParkShoot Out Arena RV Park
RV ParkStampede RV Resort
RV Park with Dump StationsTombstone RV Park & Campground
RV Park with Dump StationsTombstone RV Park & Campground
RV ParkTombstone Territories RV Park
RV ParkSierra Vista RV Park
RV ParkMountain Vista RV Park
RV Park



